Creating job opportunities is a pipedream for the SMEs of Namibia
On an almost daily basis, we hear about the promise of creating new jobs in Namibia. Not one or two, but hundreds of thousands by 2030. As a small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) business owner, I fully support that idea, but I just don't know where these jobs are going to come from. They will certainly not be created by SMEs. We would love to 'power the job market', but we simply can't afford to. The tax burden on small businesses that are mildly successful after years of investment is simply too high.Entrepreneurs must contend with shifting economic policies, fluctuating exchange rates, and a market that's still maturing. Access to financing remains limited, particularly for startups lacking extensive credit histories or substantial collateral. Layer on a regulatory framework that demands strict adherence to multiple compliance requirements, and the daily grind becomes overwhelmingly complex. These systemic obstacles set the stage for the more acute challenge: taxes that absorb the lifeblood of a growing business.
Tax regime
In Namibia, the tax regime for SMEs includes corporate income tax, value-added tax (VAT), pay-as-you-earn (PAYE) for employees, and various municipal levies. Combined, these can push the effective tax rate well above 30 percent of taxable profits. For a small business operating on thin margins, every percentage point matters. High VAT thresholds prompt early registration, resulting in a significant cash-flow mismatch between the VAT collected and the VAT paid to suppliers. The cumulative effect is a relentless squeeze on working capital.
These obligations leave SMEs reluctant to commit to new hires, since each additional employee increases PAYE contributions, pension fund levies, and potential unemployment insurance costs. Investment in plant, equipment, or expansion stalls when every tax payment chips away at funds that could have fuelled growth. Don't get me wrong, we understand the need for taxes and are willing to pay our share. However, developing new job opportunities on top of the employees we already have is simply a bridge too far.
Maintaining a positive cash flow in such a 'taxing' environment requires rigorous forecasting and constant re-evaluation of payment schedules. As a result, SMEs defer critical investments, delay supplier payments, or avoid expanding, thereby stifling growth and potential job opportunities.
If taxes were the only challenge, it would be manageable. However, the administrative burden is immense. SME owners often find themselves acting as de facto accountants, compliance officers, and legal advisors. Preparing monthly VAT returns, annual financial statements, and tax reconciliations requires expertise that many entrepreneurs lack.
Additional fees
Outsourcing these tasks to professional service firms incurs additional fees that can rival actual tax bills. The cumulative time and cost diverted into compliance could otherwise be channelled towards marketing, product development, or workforce training. This dynamic undermines the Government's objectives of broad-based economic empowerment and poverty reduction, especially when it announces the development of thousands of new jobs.
Small and medium-sized enterprises are the backbone of Namibia's economy, driving innovation and creating jobs, as we are constantly being told. Yet the heavy tax burden and regulatory complexity stand as formidable barriers to their growth. By reimagining fiscal policies and streamlining administrative processes, policymakers can empower SMEs to hire more staff, invest in expansion, and contribute meaningfully to national prosperity. Only through a balanced approach—one that secures essential revenues while nurturing business dynamism—will Namibia's SME sector be able to fulfil its role as a job generator and uplift communities across the country. Action needs to be taken now, rather than later.